Two-color screenprinted flyer / poster published and distributed by the Youth International Party (Yippie!) advertising the [Festival of Life] held in Chicago, August 25 - 30, [1968]. Flyer reads "Yippie! Chicago Aug 25-30" against a stream of conscious list of words and names of people including Arlo Guthrie, Phil Ochs, The Fugs, Pete Seeger, Bread and Puppet Theater, Paul Krassner, Ed Sanders, Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg, Milton Glaser and many others. [details]
Winter 1937 issue of the periodical "Transition," edited by Eugene Jolas, associate editor James Johnson Sweeney. Front cover design by Marcel Duchamp reproducing the Readymade "Comb." Includes "In Memory of My Father," by James Agee; "Resurgent," by Forrest Anderson; "The Skeleton of the Day," by Hans Arp; "Le Pont Brisé," by Paul Eluard; "Two Poems," by Randall Jarrell; "Planetarische Reise," by Eugene Jolas; "Chêne et Chien," by Raymond Queneau; "Anonyme," by André de Richaud; "Lover as Fox," by Muriel Rukeyser; "Cactus Gardens," by Sanders Russell; "Séparation," by Camille Schuwer; "work in Progress. ... [details]
Double sided postcard published in conjunction with show held May 1 - 29, 1977. Includes works by Nicholas Africano, Milet Andrejevic, Jake Berthot, Pinchas Cohen Gan, Leonard Contino, Brad Davis, Helen DeMott, Porfirio di Donna, Carol Engelson, Heidi Glück, Denise Green, Edith Gwathmey, Jan Hafstrom, Mary Heilmann, Stuart Hitch, Neil Jenney, Bill Jensen, Jane Koplowitz, Harriet Korman, Lois Lane, Don Leicht, Marilyn Lenkowsky, Sylvia Mangold, Robert Moskowitz, Judith Murry, Blinky Palermo, Harvey Quaytman, Edda Renouf, Judith Rifka, Michael Robbins, Susan Rothenberg, Doug Sanderson, Ted Stamm, Pat Steir, Gary Stephan, Susanna Tanger, Ellie Thompson, Peter Tkacheffa, John Torreano, Carolynn Umlauf, and Terry Winters. [details]
A collection of three pieces of ephemera published and distributed by the Youth International Party (Yippie!) in [1968]. Includes: a two-page mimeographed announcement of plans for a "Festival of Life," a protest and free festival to be held in Chicago August 25-30, [1968]; a two-color screenprinted flyer / poster for the [Festival of Life] that reads "Yippie! Chicago Aug 25-30" against a stream of conscious list of words and names of people; and a mimeographed flyer titled "Bags Yippies Can Get Into in Your Hometown" with a bulleted list of ways Yippies could participate in growing the Yippie movement and ways to prepare for the "Festival of Life" in Chicago. [details]
Flyer published in conjunction with a party celebrating a)The Third Anniversary Issue of Fuck You / A Magazine for the Arts, b)The Grand Opening of Peace Eye Bookstore, c) The World Premier of The Fugs!, at Ed Sander's Peace Eye Bookstor, New York, February 24, [1964]. [details]
Three page press release for the "Festival of Life," a protest and free festival offering a "living, cultural, spiritual alternative" to the life style of "the National Death (Democratic) Convention in Chicago" organized by the Youth International Party (YIP) or "Yippies" held August 25 - August 30, [1968] in Chicago, IL, coinciding with the Democratic National Convention. ... [details]
Program published in conjunction with a performance by The Fugs held March, 1965. The Fugs is: Al Fowler, Tuli Kupferberg, Ed Sanders, Peter Stampfel, Kenneth Weaver, and Steve Weber. Contents include the lyrics to two The Fugs songs: "Coca-Cola Douche" and "Jack Off Blues. ... [details]
Flyer for a performance by The Fugs held March 8, [1965] at the East End Theatre in New York City. The Fugs was Tuli Kupferberg, Ed Sanders, Al Fowler, Ken Weaver, and Peter Stamfel. [details]
Panorama poster published in conjunction with the opening of Paula Cooper's new space at 155 Wooster Street, New York and it's inaugural group exhibition opening on [May 5, 1973]. Artists included Jennifer Bartlett, Lynda Benglis, Robert Grosvenor, Keith Hollingworth, Robert Huot, Urlich Rückriem, Edwin Ruda, Doug Sanderson, Joel Shapiro, Alan Shields, Richard Van Buren, Jacqueline Winsor, and Kes Zapkus. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held July 2 - November 6, 2016. Show curated by Eugen Blume and Catherine Nichols. Catalogue features texts by An Paenhuysen. Artists include Hannah Arendt, Carl Barks, Robert Barry, Lothar Baumgarten, Samuel Beckett, Joseph Beuys, Ludwig Biller I, James Wallace Black, Bonaparte, Dirk Braeckman, Andre Breton, Marcel Broodthaers, James Broughton, Hendrick ter Brugghen, Berlinde de Bruyckere, Theodor de Bry, Peter Buggenhout, Nöel Burch, Rachel Carson, , Adelbert von Chamisso, Charlie Chaplin, Larry Clark, Manthia Diawara, Stan Douglas, Georges Dudognon, Bob Dylan, Andrzej Dziewanowski, Elif Erkan, Harun Farocki, Andreas Fischer, Urs Fischer, Peter Fischli & David Weiss, Fisk Jubilee Singers, Gisele Freund, Caspar David Friedrich, Anna Bella Geiger, Baylis Glascock, Edouard Glissant, Francisco de Goya, Andreas Gursky, João Maria & Pedro Paiva Gusmão, Thomas Heath, Martin Heidegger, Jan Sanders van Hemessen, Binelde Hyrcan, Rolf Julius, Immanuel Kant, Hein Kaske, On Kawara, Petra Kelly, Sister Mary Corita, Anselm Kiefer, Paul Klee, Barbara Klemm, Jeff Koons, Paul Lafargue, Hedy Lamarr, Zhensheng Li, Johannes Linderman, David Lloyd, Martin Luther, Len Lye, Gustav Machaty, Lydia Mall, André Malraux, Bhikku Maha Mani, Ralph Eugene Meatyard, Kazimierz Michalowski, Carmen Miranda, Bruce Nauman, Nam June Paik, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Manfred Paul, Ezra Pound, Jason Rhoades, Gerhard Richter, Rihanna, Auguste Rodin, Hermann Oskar Rückwardt, nicolaus III Rugendas, Nelly Sachs, Johannes Gottfried Schadow, Christoph Schmidt, Carl Schulz, Kurt Schwitters, Allan Sekula, Fazal Sheikh, Yinka Shonibare, Roman Signer, Renée Sintenis, Melanie Smith, Martin Städeli, Thomas Struth, Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, Rosemarie Trockel, Cy Twombly, Arnaud Uyttenhove, Biagio Vairone, Jeff Wall, Andy Warhol, Gebrüder Weber Berlin, Eyal Weizman, Franz West, Rachel Whiteread, Johann Mathias Willebrand, August Wohlfahrt, Joachim Anthonisz. ... [details]